Project
Reverse Dependencies for redis
The projects listed here declare redis as a runtime or development dependency
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thrift http rakc server
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Distributed Object Locks built on Redis.
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Timberline is a simple and extensible queuing system built in Ruby and backed by Redis. It makes as few assumptions as possible about how you want to interact with your queues while also allowing for some functionality that should be universally useful, like allowing for automatic retries of jobs and queue statistics.
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Timecop extension for Redis
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A timed counter based on redis hashes
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Timeseries metrics store using Redis as a backend
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Phone number provider.
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Encrypted Redis ORM for rails, active record style
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5GTANGO Gatekeeper has been developed and started to accumulate some technical debt, namely with repeated code. This utility adresses that debt by extrating the duplicated code.
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Toggleable gem provides basic toggle functionality
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When you have a lot of microservices it can be hard to manage secret keys for all of them. TokenManager
handles RSA keys generation, caching and verification.
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A session store that uses session, json serialization, and gets session fullmeasure from an http header
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Bring comments into your Bridgetown site via Mastodon and the Fediverse
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ToriiDB
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Know what ActiveRecord objects touched by another
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Small supporting units of Ruby to use with Rails
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Very simple object mappings for ruby objects
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Perform user experiments and A/B tests in your rails apps
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Record status along with other relevant information of
transactions or tasks. These tasks can be a cron job, large background jobs or
a simple method. Any task can be plugged into a transaction block. Transaction
uses Redis to store the current status along with other information.
The events within the transaction block can be published via Pubsub client
(ex. Pusher, PubNub or any valid pubsub client).These events can be
subscribed in the client app for the live status of the transaction.
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treestore stores two different types of data:
1) values, which are stored according to their SHA-1 hashcode
2) trees, which are sets of values and/or other trees, stored via a SHA-1 hashcode
In addition, there are references that allow you to 'bookmark' a SHA-1 hashcode for easier lookup.
If you think of the core git, but on any key-value backend store (like the included Redis one), you've got the right idea.
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Activity